From my cozy vantage in one of the overstuffed reading chairs at
the local Barnes & Noble, I heard a strident voice, followed
by a distinctly snotty laugh: "No you're not. That's silly.
You're just a little boy." Likely it was the seven-year-old
girl who'd been holding court at the children's table, organizing
puzzles and, with an oozing superiority, instructing the three and
four year-olds not to fold pages or run in the aisles. What poor
child was she humiliating, I wondered. Then I heard the voice of
my then three-year-old son: "I am too. I am Batman."

Instinctively I got up, my hand in a fist. I sat back down. A middle-aged
woman shouldn't take on a seven-year-old girl, no matter how badly
she wants to preserve her son’s innocence. Better of course
to watch what he would do. "I'm Batman," I heard Branden
repeat defiantly. A moment later he was running circles around the
aisles of books, issuing guttural hero sounds and stabbing at the
air with an invisible sword. Another boy joined him. "I'm Batman
and you're Superman," Branden sang. He had found a friend and
all was well. His super powers had been preserved.

The 11th is the house of friends. Opposite the 5th, that sandbox
of child-like innocence and fantasies of our specialness, the 11th
house describes our first experience of tribal society, the playground
where we meet the world. In the 11th we discover we're not alone,
which, as my son had just found out, can be both good and bad. The
11th house brings us allies, the comforts of shared experience, the
strength of a collective stand. It also turns a critical eye on our
behavior, makes us vulnerable to group opinion, and defines us as "out" or "in." The
house of groups and organizations, the 11th immerses us in the society
of others. Like a jeweler's wheel, it grinds and polishes the individualism
and creativity of our 5th house self, fitting us to the larger world.

But that's not all. There's a garage sale of concepts associated
with this house. When I began this series, a colleague wrote to say
she couldn't wait to read what I'd make of the 11th house. I replied, "Me
too!" For if there’s a theme that strings its varied keywords
together, it has mostly eluded me. We’re told that the 11th
symbolizes the social codes that bind a society and the
revolutionary zeal that breaks it apart. It rules both astrologers
and the legislators who would outlaw them. It describes what we have
in common and what makes us different. It's a future-oriented house,
but its social web is often sticky with the past. We’re told
the 11th is about warm and loving relationships and the
ones about which we feel much less. Here we’re detached. And
we subordinate ourselves to collective aims. Yet we’re also
acknowledged. Astrologers like to say that the 5th is where we give
love, and the 11th is where we receive it. Then there’s that
most curious assignment, which says the 11th is the house of hopes
and dreams. As if that weren’t enough, the 11th also rules
airplanes, computers, varicose veins, electricity, galaxies, ballots,
advisors, humanitarian causes, and unexpected gains.

Multiple keywords are a bothersome feature of many houses. But what
troubles me most about the 11th is how little confirmation I’ve
gotten from matching its keywords to my clients’ experiences.
When this house is active, I cannot confidently state, as some astrology
cookbooks do, that a person will be inspired to join a 12-step group
or volunteer for the PTA. Or that when this house is challenged,
it signals difficulty with friends. When a friendship becomes so
problematic that an individual needs to discuss it with an astrologer,
often enough the 7th house of partnerships or the 5th of playmates
is involved. Perhaps the most surprising feature of this house is
how differently it’s described by classical astrologers and
contemporary ones. Modern astrology is often accused of white-washing
all traditional forecasts of misfortune. But the 11th is one house
which modern astrology has actually stripped of its happy fairy wings!

Classical astrologers called the 11th “Bona Fortuna” (“Good
Fortune”) and the “House of Good Spirit.” The logic,
according to Deborah Houlding1, a modern expert in traditional astrology,
is that a planet in the 11th is distant enough from the Ascendant
that it can be seen clearly. Symbolically, it has passed the danger
of being combust the rising Sun. And, it has freed itself from the
12th house hazards of incarceration or invisibility. Planets here
are elevated above earth, and in their diurnal motion, are heading
toward the Midheaven. Attaining one’s desires are the promise
of this position. Manilus considered the 11th the most fortunate
of all the houses, superior even to the 10th. The Midheaven suggests
completion; power in the 10th has nowhere to go but down. A planet
in the 11th, however, is on the way up. And so this house is festooned
with hope, optimism, faith, ambition, and triumph. Lucky, benevolent
Jupiter is said to “joy” in this house.

According to John Frawley, another modern expert in the traditional
approach, the 11th’s good fortune further derives from its
position as second house from the 10th. It therefore indicates gifts
(2nd house possessions) that come from the King (10th house). By
extension, the 11th holds all manner of lucky breaks, from pennies
on the sidewalk to lottery wins, any bounty that drops unexpectedly
from above. It’s this logic that first put “friends” in
this house too. Friends are natural benefactors. Full of goodwill
for us, they’re ready to help whenever we’re in need;
a man rich in friends is indeed wealthy. But it is a mistake, says
Frawley, to keep adding people to this house, going from friends
to all the groups and organizations to which we might belong. The
Chaldean order of planets makes the Sun ruler of the 11th. “As
is only fitting,” writes Frawley,
“for as the eleventh shows the good things that descend to
us from Heaven, so the Sun is the image of this endless, inexhaustible
bounty permeating and sustaining the cosmos.”2

Classical astrologers saw a rainbow in this house and a pot of gold.
But what happened to them? How did we fall into that more turbulent
modern zone where we do—and sometimes don’t—belong?

“Traditional astrology speaks feebly of the eleventh house
as the house of
‘hopes and wishes.’ How weak a conception for one of
the most vibrant of all the houses!”3 That’s what the
father of modern humanistic astrology, Dane Rudhyar, had to say about
the 11th. And what did Rudhyar believe was more vital than good fortune? "(B)anding
together with friends, with companions fired by a similar yearning
for vision and creative social or religious change.”
Which makes me think of a beer commercial full of visionaries and
humanitarians. The 11th lost the benefits of its position between
the 12th and 10th houses, its planets out of danger and on their
way up. Modern astrology uses the “alphabet”
system. That means the 11th house is allotted the attributes of the
11th sign of the zodiac: visionary, humanitarian, and future-oriented
Aquarius. That’s how “friends and benefactors” grew
to include “community” in general. And how we got the
assignment to join with others here, to work for the greater good.
In the 11th, says Rudhyar, “the power of society, of the collectivity
or the group, is released through the individual … or more
specifically, through the activities the individual performs through
the social unit.”4 Gone are personal hopes and dreams, also
gifts from the king. We’re now meant to join with our brothers
and sisters and map a shiny future of the world. Go to PTA meetings!
Join Overeaters Anonymous! Save the Whales!

Trained as a modern astrologer, I discovered this house’s
legacy of good fortune only recently. If planets here attract unexpected
blessings, my eyes have not been trained to look for them. I would
like to tell you happy stories of fortunate 11th house planets and
transits. But it’s perhaps an occupational hazard that clients
rarely call astrologers to say good fortune has struck them and they’d
like to know what the devil is going on. Nor am I experienced enough
in the art of horary astrology, for which the 11th’s fortunate
meanings are largely intended. Horary erects a chart for the moment
a client asks a question of an astrologer. If the question is “Will
I get what I’m hoping for?” the condition of the 11th
house ruler will indicate whether the answer is yes or no. What I
did learn from my clients was that planets or transits through this
house do not always signal a particular delight in saving humanity,
joining groups or even sharing good times with friends. In fact,
a number of clients have even told me that after reading the astrology
books, they wondered if their birth chart was wrong. Despite their
Sun or Moon, or Mercury or Venus, being in the 11th, they often felt
lost and unhappy in social situations.

Invariably people’s stories about the 11th, their journeys
to connect with the family of man, are filled with vulnerabilities,
and more than one emotional scar. Eleventh house memories often go
back to that first experience of a social unit, one’s family
of origin. And planets here, by way of aspect or archetypal qualities,
hold these stories in succinct astrological code. Jean has Pluto
in the 11th squaring her Sun. Pluto’s position shows where
we must change. It challenges us to find our power, though for a
long time we may feel powerless in this particular area of life.
Jean always felt like an outcast in her family. She's been dogged
since childhood by the feeling she doesn't fit in, that perhaps she
doesn't deserve to belong. She’s spent most of her adult life
working as a freelance computer consultant, never settling in one
place too long. But her real passion is working as a healer. Her
greatest success and joy has been finding the “tribe” who
welcomes and accepts her gift.

My friend Bill has both Moon and Saturn in his 11th. Bill's Moon
wants to nest in the comforts of a convivial circle of friends. His
greatest joy is sitting at the corner espresso bar, listening to
lively debates about politics and culture. Bill once told me that
he’s often had a deep desire to throw himself into a pile of
people and merge. But his Saturn has given him an equally strong
need to erect barriers between himself and others. As I watch Bill
move through the world, his rigid body language often sends a Saturn
message: "Don't look; don’t touch." For as long as
I've known Bill, he's been searching for community, but his Saturn
insists it must be the right community, the right company,
the right neighborhood, the right book discussion club. After years
of looking, he hasn’t found it yet. While his North Node in
Aquarius supports, demands, the search, his South Node in
Leo holds back in royal isolation.

Moon and Saturn can be reflections of one’s mother and father
in a chart. Bill's parents make a spooky haunting of his 11th house
world. Both upstanding Christians, they cared what the neighbors
thought, but never mixed with them. For years they roamed the churches
of their town, but never joined one. Bill's father opened a one-man
law office and stayed in that isolation his whole adult life, shaking
his head at "all the lunatics out there." Mom planted more
seeds of distrust, "Your friends don’t really like you.
They just want to play with your toys." Despite an upper middle
class income, the family lived in a lower middle class neighborhood,
like nobility in exile. The "rich boys" the other families
talked about, Bill and his brother became the targets of playmates
who should have been friends. The neighbor boys used to lie in wait
to throw rocks as they walked home from school.

The modern 11th house is a complicated place. Instead of that warm
and benevolent pair, Sun and Jupiter, presiding over its activities,
we have Uranus and Saturn, the ruling planets of Aquarius. The mythology
of these two suggests a never-ending conflict. Uranus had the nasty
habit of eating his children. Saturn (as Kronos) was the son who
escaped this fate and struck his father down. Uranus is lord of the
sky. Indeed, all innovation, all progress, all revolutions begin
as creative concepts—sky god stuff. When we are filled with
Uranian inspiration in this house we are like Prometheus, stealing
the fire of the gods. We are brilliant and daring. But sure as Uranus
was cut down by Saturn, so must our lofty ideals inevitably fall
to Saturn’s limits. That’s how it ended for Prometheus
too. He was punished and bound to a rock as birds pecked his liver.
The rock is Saturn, the hard reality of this house. Here is the establishment—the
group that disapproves. Uranus may inspire us to breakthroughs, but
Saturn resists change or co-opts it. The tension between these two
planets suggests our experience in this house will have its ups and
downs. At times our progressive and unorthodox inclinations will
find the utopia of likeminded community that Rudhyar celebrated.
Other times we’ll be the oddball surrounded by a forbidding
Saturn crowd.

The 11th house gives us friends and community, but it requires something
of us in return. It expects us to periodically relinquish self, to
balance individuality with “hive” mind. What's striking
about indigenous cultures is how they can live in exactly the same
way for hundreds, even thousands of years. Indigenous (earth) cultures
are heavy with Saturn. The tradeoff is that in such tribes innovating
individuals are shunned. There are no parades for being different;
individuality is death to the group. In the myth, Saturn follows
in his father’s footsteps and eats his children too, until
his son, the new sky god Zeus eventually cuts him down. The tension
between earth and sky is always present in society. The too rigid
community makes it impossible to individuate. The too individualistic
society makes for a dangerous, unstable world.

I once read (so long ago that I don’t remember where) that
prominent 11th house and/or Aquarian placements suggest a significant
experience of social rejection, a suffering of banishment at the
hands of the tribe. Starting out as an astrologer, whenever I met
someone whose chart carried this potential, I’d ask if this
were true. Most indeed had at least one painful story of being drummed
from a social circle. Years later it occurred to me that I might
have gotten the same response had I asked everyone this
question, prominent 11th house placements or not. The needs of the
5th house individual are inherently antagonistic to the needs of
the 11th house group. Who among us hasn’t been wounded by this
collision? Indeed, it’s often this very experience that puts
us in touch with our own humanity. Rejection makes us question our
5th house creativity. It also calls in question the rules of our
11th house community. We might suffer in this house, but such suffering
increases our sensitivity to the sufferings of others. Experiences
here inspire us to dream of a better world.

The modern 11th house is a turbulent and changing field. Its feedback
keeps us on our toes. The social organizations ruled by the 11th
are forever in a kind of flux, the tension between the inspiration
that set them in motion and the forces of time that pull them apart.
Friends are a constantly shifting circle. Groups are good for a couple
years then fall apart. In the 11th we meet the constantly changing
world. Whatever self we set up in the 5th gets jostled here, tested,
to stand or sink in its shifting ground. The 10th describes our role
in society. But the 11th shows how we actually do it, how
we must "realize" ourselves in shifting circumstances,
over and over again.

When planets transit or progress through the 11th, people often
feel the urge to take their interests, gifts or skills into a larger
world. Whatever sandbox they’ve been playing in is no longer
big enough. They need to see a new reflection of themselves. With
11th house transits, we grow bold enough to enter a new field or
widen the circle we’re already in. Something may happen to
us that radically shifts our priorities. We may indeed meet fortunate
allies and benefactors. Or we may encounter resistance—especially
from the group we might be leaving behind. In her excellent book
about solar returns5, Mary Shea suggests that planets in this house
signal a year when you should question all the rules, particularly
your own. Let Uranus challenge your familiar Saturn structures. Investigate
what holds you back. Let yourself ask daring new questions. Why not
quit your job and start a new business? Why not sail around the world
all by yourself? You don’t have to act on every crazy impulse
that pops into your head. But if don’t have any crazy ideas
stretching your sense of what’s possible, how can wonderful
surprises happen in your future?

One way to reconcile Uranus and Saturn is to refine your wild ideas
into realistic goals. It is wise to think about your future whenever
this house is emphasized by transit or progression. And that takes
us full circle. It brings us back to the classical view that this
is the house of hopes and dreams.

For years I avoided this phrase until I discovered it’s actually
useful and true. I was inspired by Robert Cole’s wonderful
book on the annual path of the Sun through the houses.6 Each year,
for approximately one month, the Sun returns to your 11th house.
This is the month, says Cole, when you should choose the seeds for
whatever you want to plant in the year ahead. It is the time when
hoping and dreaming are most beneficial. The Sun has just transited
through your 10th house—representing an annual peak, when your
work has ripened and is most visible. Now you must start preparing
for the next year’s harvest. What do you want to grow in the
year ahead? This is the month to list everything you’d like
to accomplish.

What’s even better is that you don’t have to start working
on these goals right away. You get a month to think about them. When
the Sun leaves the 11th and enters your 12th house, you need to let
these visions soak into your dreams, like germinating seeds. It’s
common, during the 12th house month for your hopes to turn into doubts
and fears. But we’ll talk about that next time, when we reach
the final installment of this series!

Robert Cole (with Paul Williams), The Book
of Houses (Entwhistle Books: 1980).

TWELVE
MOONS WORKSHOP

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